Following their two concerts at Maple Leaf Gardens in Toronto, Ontario, the Beatles traveled to Montreal, Quebec for two performances at the Forum on September 8th
1964, the 16th city of their 1964 North American Tour.

The Beatles gave a matinee performance to 9,500 fans that afternoon, and then later would give a sold-out evening concert before a crowd of 11,500. The Beatles held a press conference at 6pm
from the stage of the Forum, between the afternoon and evening shows. Following the questions and answers with the Montreal press, John Lennon was briefly interviewed
individually by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. The Beatles' press conference and the John Lennon interview are both presented below.

15-year-old Ted Brennan was among the thousands of teenagers in attendance that day. Ted recalls, "I remember being very excited at the thought that
I was in the same building as the Beatles... the unique sensation of being in the same place as my idols, breathing
the same air."

Brennan remembers having difficulty hearing the Beatles' performance: "The only time the music could be heard was the first few notes of each song, before the screaming
sound would drown it out until each song ended. There was constant screaming for the entire concert, only stopping long enough between songs to hear them... mostly Paul as I
recall... doing a short intro before the next song. Then bedlam again! I remember vividly a feeling of electricity
running up my spine the entire concert! In retrospect, it was more of a sociological experience than a music concert."

Opening acts appearing before the Beatles took the stage at the Montreal Forum included the Righteous Brothers, Jackie de Shannon, the Bill Black Combo, and the Exciters.

From here the Beatles were next scheduled for a performance at the Gator Bowl in Jacksonville Florida, but due to Hurricane Dora
their flight needed to be detoured to Key West at the last moment.

- Jay Spangler, www.beatlesinterviews.org

Montreal Press Conference

Q: "Is Paul getting married?"

PAUL: "No."

Q: "How about Jane Asher?"

PAUL: (jokingly) "I don't know."

(laughter)

JOHN: (jokingly) "I'm going out with her."

Q: "Paul, is John the boss of the Beatles? Do you agree with that?"

PAUL: "I don't know really. On some things he is. I'm trying to think if he is."

JOHN: "No, I'm not."

PAUL: "There's no real leader, anyway. It depends who shouts the loudest."

Q: "Would the Beatles like to appear in other cities here in Canada... not only
Montreal, Vancouver and Toronto..."

JOHN: "We'll appear anywhere where there's enough people and enough money, you know."

(laughter)

Q: "Would it be too personal to ask how much the Beatles have grossed so far?"

PAUL: "We don't know."

GEORGE: "We don't know. We ran out of fingers to count on."

Q: (asks question away from microphone about sun tanning)

PAUL: "Umm, we haven't got tans, no. We have tans when we're on holiday, but we lost 'em. I don't
miss it. It's too much work trying to get a tan, anyway... and hot, sitting in the sun all day."

Q: "What do you do while you're cooped up or imprisoned in the hotel room?"

GEORGE: "Ice skating."

(laughter)

PAUL: "Play monopoly..."

Q: "If you were to change your style, how would you change it?"

JOHN: "Well, we couldn't. you know. Well a bit, but not much. It'd still have to be three guitars and drums
and that."

Q: "Is the tour going according to plan?"

BEATLES: "Yes."

JOHN: "Yes, except for the hurricane."

Q: "Have Montreal teenagers behaved themselves?"

BEATLES: "Yes."

JOHN: "I think they're the most well-behaved, so far."

Q: "Does any one of you speak french?"

BEATLES: "No."

JOHN: (showing off a memorized phrase) "Je me leve a sept heurves!"

(laughter)

JOHN: "Bonjour, oui."

Q: "Is it true you really enjoy the screaming?"

BEATLES: "Yes."

PAUL: "It's good for the atmosphere, you know."

Q: (holding a magazine) "Paul, this magazine reported that you're agnostic. Any comments?"

JOHN: "We all are."

PAUL: "I am, you know..."

Q: "Who does Ringo consider to be the best actor of the group?"

RINGO: "John."

JOHN: "And I like Ringo's acting best, too."

Q: "What was the background to the recording of 'Aint She Sweet'?"

JOHN: "Rubbish!"

(Beatles giggle)

Q: "After you've had a recording session, do you have any extra dubbing that you do... Do you dub any parts
on guitars...?"

PAUL: "Yeah sometimes."

JOHN: "Yeah."

PAUL: "Sometimes we..."

DEREK TAYLOR: (referring to the fans screaming outside) "About three more questions.
A lot of pressure, I'm told, on the outside doors."

Q: "What is the attendence tonight?"

JOHN: "Don't know."

DEREK TAYLOR: "About nine thousand to ten thousand."

Q: "Do the Beatles plan to come back here?"

JOHN: "We don't plan, but we'd like to."

PAUL: "We'd like to."

JOHN: (giggling) "There's a lot of money over here."

DEREK TAYLOR: "Two more questions."

Q: "What group, would you fellas say, might give you a little bit of a problem in the next year or so..."

GEORGE: "Black And White Minstrels."

PAUL: "It could be anyone, you know."

Q: "Did John Lennon force one of the emcees off-stage in Vancouver because he had asked the children to be quiet?"

JOHN: (laughs) "No. I'm not a very forceful type."

YOUNG GIRL: "How much of a part has your haircut played in your success?"

PAUL: "Quite a bit, you know, nationally. But originally it was our records that brought us to the interest."

Q: "Do you prefer to be singers first, or musicians first?"

PAUL: "Singers, I think."

JOHN: "Singers, 'cuz we can't play."

RINGO: "I can't sing."

JOHN: "Well, I can't, anyway."

CBC Interview

Q: "John, How did you come to write your book in the first place?"

JOHN: "Umm, it was a hobby, and I'd been doing it before I was a Beatle, you know... before I sang or
anything."

Q: "The book's a collection of pieces you wrote over a period of years, or all at once?"

JOHN: "Yeah. Most of it's new but there's about four or five pieces from when I was about seventeen or
eighteen."

Q: "For North Americans it's difficult to understand the language, which is Liverpool... it's a bit of
Hamburg... it's broken language. Now this disrupted language, do you do it on purpose, sort of, with the words.. with
the letters? Or is it something you just hear?"

JOHN: "Oh no, I mean, you'd never meet anybody that talks like that. I've never met anyone. It's just the
way I like to write, you know. It makes me laugh."

Q: "Do you think there's anybody else trying to copy you?"

JOHN: "I don't... I haven't noticed it. I get a lot of letters from fans doing it in sort of the same style, but
it doesn't harm anyone."

Q: "You don't copy it from Edward Lear, for example?"

JOHN: "No, I've never read Lear, or Joyce for that matter, which is the ones they always mention.
I've read Thurber and Carroll, that's all."

Q: "Do you have any ideas for anything more to write from your North American impressions, or have there been too
great..."

JOHN: "Well, I never use impressions, I only use people anyway... and very seldom that... I just use it
out of me head."

Q: "Do you have anything else lined up?"

JOHN: (giggling) "Well, I'm just writing another one, almost the same, just different people, you know."

Source: Transcribed by www.beatlesinterviews.org from video copy of the press conference and interview